Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 334: A Normal Day

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Chapter 334: A Normal Day

Back in the quiet, tense bubble of Oakhaven, the pattern was broken. For the first time in days, the sun rose and set without a new disappearance. The villagers dared to hope, their haggard eyes holding a flicker of something other than fear. The trio did their morning and evening patrols—checking the tree line, scanning the pastures, speaking with the watchmen—and found nothing. No new ghostly traces, no possessed animals, no chilling distortions in the air.

The unnatural peace was almost as unnerving as the attacks. It felt like the calm in the eye of a storm, or the pause of a predator regrouping.

After the final patrol of the day, they returned to their small villa on the mayor’s grounds.

"I’m going to the back ridge," Elreth announced, her voice tight. The frustration of feeling like a 3rd wheel was gawking at her. She needed to move, to burn, to feel the heat of her own law. She collected her spear and left without another word, a streak of crimson determination heading for the mountains.

That left Nero and Khione in the quiet villa.

Words wouldn’t help. Action would.

They changed into their training gear and walked out to the flat, grassy area behind the villa. They faced each other, ten paces apart. No nod was needed this time. The understanding was in their eyes: Stay sharp. Push harder. Be ready for anything.

The spar began without a signal.

Nero opened with Lightning, not for a direct strike, but for terrain control. He slammed a palm to the ground. "Static Field."

A web of faint, crackling energy spread across the grass in a wide circle around them. It wouldn’t hurt, but it would tingle, disrupt concentration, and signal any movement through it—a counter to invisible observers.

Khione accepted the challenge. She didn’t try to dispel it. She adapted. She lifted off the ground slightly, not flying, but letting a thin, permanent platform of ice form under her boots, insulating her from the static. She raised her wand, and the air grew cold.

"Frost Mist." A dense, freezing fog erupted from her, swallowing the field, the grass, and Nero. It wasn’t to blind him, but to muffle sound and distort vision for anyone watching from the outside.

Inside the mist, they were in their own private world. Nero switched to Fire, a low corona around his body to keep the biting cold at bay. He listened. The mist deadened sound, but he could hear the almost silent shush of Khione’s ice-platform sliding.

He feinted left, then dashed right with Lightning speed. He emerged from the mist just as Khione did, having predicted his move. She was ready. "Ice Mirror: Reflection." A plate of perfect ice formed in front of her. Nero’s lightning-charged punch hit it—and the energy reflected back at him, forcing him to twist awkwardly to avoid his own attack.

He rolled with the momentum, coming up and switching to Fire. He breathed a concentrated jet of flame at her feet, not at her, aiming to melt her icy platform. Khione jumped, the platform dissolving, and as she fell, she created a dozen small, sharp ice-darts that shot down at him like rain.

Nero became a whirlwind. He used Lightning-enhanced speed to dodge between the falling darts, his movements a blur. He closed the distance again, this time his sword wreathed in a helix of Fire and Lightning. He didn’t swing to hit her.

He used a "Flame Cyclone" move, spinning to create a vortex of heat and wind that dispelled her lingering frost mist in a rush of steam.

The field was clear again. They were both breathing hard, circling. The spar had moved beyond simple combat. It was a dialogue of adaptation, a rehearsal for fighting an enemy that used misdirection and environment.

Khione tried a new tactic. "Glacial Grasp." Instead of attacking Nero, she aimed at the ground around him. Ice shot up, not to trap his body, but to encase his boots, rooting him to the spot. It was a move meant for a faster, more mobile foe.

Nero grinned. He let the ice hold him. He focused his Fire law inward, superheating the metal soles of his training boots. The ice around them turned to water, then steam, in seconds. He broke free, but the move had cost her focus. In that split second, he lunged.

He didn’t use his sword. He used his body. He tackled her around the waist, his momentum carrying them both to the soft grass. They landed in a tangle. He immediately pinned her wrists above her head, his knees on either side of her hips, his weight holding her down. His face was inches from hers, his eyes glowing with the faint, fading light of his laws.

For a moment, they were both still, breathing heavily. The fight was over. He had won.

Khione didn’t struggle. She looked up at him, her icy blue eyes searching his. There was no anger, only assessment. Then, a ghost of a smile touched her lips. "You’re getting faster at switching," she said, her voice a quiet puff of air.

"You’re getting better at making me waste energy," he replied, not moving.

The moment stretched. The strange, watched feeling was still there, a faint buzz at the edge of his senses, but here, in this grounded, physical victory, it felt distant. He slowly released her wrists, but didn’t move away. He rested his forehead against hers, just for a second, a silent exchange of reassurance and focus.

They stood up together, brushing grass from their clothes. The spar was done. They were both sharper for it. As they walked back to the villa in the deepening twilight, the peaceful, watchful silence of the village felt heavier. The ghosts were gone for now. But the feeling of being observed lingered. The real enemy, the source, was still out there. And it wasn’t just watching the village.

It was watching them. And their silent, intense spar had been a message, sent into the gathering dark: We are not easy prey. We know you’re out there.